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On War and Leadership: The Words of Combat Commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf
On War and Leadership: The Words of Combat Commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf
On War and Leadership: The Words of Combat Commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf
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On War and Leadership: The Words of Combat Commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf

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What can we learn about leadership and the experience of war from the best combat leaders the world has ever known? This book takes us behind the scenes and to the front lines of the major wars of the past 250 years through the words of twenty combat commanders. What they have to say--which is remarkably similar across generational, national, and ideological divides--is a fascinating take on military history by those who lived it. It is also worthwhile reading for anyone, from any walk of life, who makes executive decisions.


The leaders showcased here range from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf. They include such diverse figures as Napoleon Bonaparte, commanders on both sides of the Civil War (William Tecumseh Sherman and Stonewall Jackson), German and American World War II generals (Rommel and Patton), a veteran of the Arab-Israeli wars (Moshe Dayan), and leaders from both sides of the Vietnam War (Vo Nguyen Giap and Harold Moore). What they have had in common is an unrivaled understanding of the art of command and a willingness to lead from the front. All earned the respect and loyalty of those they led--and moved them to risk death.


The practices of these commanders apply to any leadership situation, whether military, business, political, athletic, or other. Their words reveal techniques for anticipating the competition, leading through example, taking care of the "troops," staying informed, turning bad luck to advantage, improvising, and making bold decisions.


Leader after leader emphasizes the importance of up-front "muddy boots" leadership and reveals what it takes to persevere and win. Identifying a pattern of proven leadership, this book will benefit anyone who aspires to lead a country, a squadron, a company, or a basketball team. It is a unique distillation of two and a half centuries of military wisdom.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 10, 2009
ISBN9781400825165
On War and Leadership: The Words of Combat Commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf

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    On War and Leadership - Michael Owen Connelly

    Copyright © 2002 by Princeton University Press

    Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, 3 Market Place,

    Woodstock, Oxfordshire OX20 1SY

    All Rights Reserved

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Connelly, Owen, 1929–

    On war and leadership : the words of combat commanders from Frederick the Great to Norman Schwarzkopf / by Owen Connelly.

    p. cm.

    Includes bibliographical references and index.

    eISBN: 978-1-40082-516-5 1. Leadership. 2. Command of troops. 3. Military history. 4. Decision making.

    UB210 .C67 2002 355.3'3041—dc21 2002016914

    This book has been composed in Berkeley Oldstyle Typeface

    Printed on acid-free paper. ∞

    www.pupress.princeton.edu

    Printed in the United States of America

    10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    I. The Modern Originals: Frederick the Great (1713–1786) and Napoleon (1769–1821)

    II. William Tecumseh Sherman (1820–1891)

    III. Stonewall Jackson (1824–1863)

    IV. John Singleton Mosby (1833–1916)

    V. Thomas Edward Lawrence (1888–1935):Lawrence of Arabia

    VI. Archibald Percival Wavell (1883–1950)

    VII. Erwin Johannes Eugen Rommel (1891–1945)

    VIII. George S. Patton, Jr. (1885–1945)

    IX. Charles de Gaulle (1890–1970)

    X. Erich von Manstein (1887–1973)

    XI. Bernard Law Montgomery (1887–1976)

    XII. William Joseph Slim (1891–1970)

    XIII. Joseph Warren Vinegar Joe Stilwell (1883–1946)

    XIV.Matthew Bunker Ridgway (1895–1993)

    XV. Moshe Dayan (1915–1981)

    XVI. Vo Nguyen Giap (1911– )

    XVII. Harold G. Moore (1924– )

    XVIII. Nicholas F. Nick Vaux (1936– ): Vaux and the Happy Warriors of 42 Commando

    XIX. H. Norman Schwarzkopf (1934– )

    Conclusions

    Notes

    Index

    Acknowledgments

    First, I thank my editor, Brigitta van Rheinberg, who kept me in the game; without her support, this book might never have appeared. My gratitude extends also to her coworkers, notably Carol Hagan, Bill Laznovsky, Elise Bajo, and Jodi Beder.

    General Hal Moore was wonderfully helpful and generous, as was Joe Gallo-way; they are exceptional men. General Nick Vaux, Royal Marine Commandos, gave me support with a dash of wry British humor. Major Dik Daso, USAF (fighter pilot–historian), put me in touch with General Chuck Horner, Air Force commander in the Gulf War, who briefed me on his style of leadership.

    Among others who gave me guidance were my friends Dennis Showalter (Colorado College), Dr. Hal Winton (School of Advanced Airpower Studies), and S. Paul MacKenzie (University of South Carolina). At the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, I am grateful to Director Phillip A. Griffiths, who allowed me extra time at that renowned place, and Peter Paret, who invited me to join his Levée-en-masse Seminar (1995–97), whose members, especially Alan Forrest (York University) and Dan Moran (Naval Postgraduate School), extended me sage counsel. And I acknowledge the favor of the Directors of the Consortium on Revolutionary Europe, who allowed me to use its meetings as a sounding board for many of the concepts and quotations used in this book. I must also thank my department chairs at U.S.C., successively Peter Becker and Pat Maney, for allowing me free time and travel funds.

    Finally, I extend my heartfelt appreciation to assistants who facilitated my work over the years: Robert Alderson (now Ph.D.), James Elkins, Mark Mayer, Scott Hileman, and Bart Brodowski.

    Chapter III: Excerpts from I Rode with Stonewall by Henry Kyd Douglas. Copyright 1940 by the University of North Carolina Press, renewed 1968 by J. Howard Beckenbaugh. Used by permission of the publisher.

    Chapter IV: Excerpts from The Memoirs of Colonel John S. Mosby by John Singleton Mosby. Ed by Charles Wells Russell. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1959.

    Chapter V: Excerpts from Seven Pillars of Wisdom by T. E. Lawrence, copyright 1926,1935 by Doubleday, a division of Random House, Inc. Used by permission of the publisher.

    Chapter VII: Excerpts from The Rommel Papers copyright 1953 by B. H. Liddell-Hart and renewed 1981 by Lady Kathleen Liddell-Hart, Fritz Bayerlein-Dittmar, and Manfred Rommel. Reprinted by permission of Harcourt, Inc., and David Higham Associates, Ltd.

    Chapter VIII: Excerpts from The Patton Papers, 2 vols., edited by Martin Blumen-son. Copyright 1974 by Martin Blumenson. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

    Chapter X: Excerpts reprinted with permission from Lost Victories by Erich von Manstein, ca. 1958. Published in the United States in 1982 by Presidio Press, 505B San Marin Drive, ste. 160,Novato, CA 94945.

    Chapter XII: Excerpts from Defeat into Victory by Field Marshall Sir William Slim. 2d ed. London: Cassell & Co, 1956. Copyright holder unknown.

    Chapter XIV: Excerpts from Soldier: The Memoirs of Matthew B. Ridgway by General Matthew B. Ridgway. Copyright © 1956 by Matthew B. Ridgway and Harold H. Martin. Copyright © 1956 by Curtis Publishing Company. Copyright © renewed 1984. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.

    Chapter XVII: Excerpts from We Were Soldiers Once . . . and Young by Lt. Gen. H. G. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway. Copyright © 1992 by Lt. Gen. H. G. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway. Used by permission of Random House, Inc.

    Chapter XVIII: Excerpts from Take That Hill! Royal Marines in the Falklands War by Maj. Gen. Nick Vaux. McLean, VA: Brassey’s (US), 1990.

    Chapter XIX: Excerpts from It Doesn’t Take a Hero by General H. Norman Schwarzkopf and Peter Petre. Copyright 1992 by H. Norman Schwarzkopf. Used by permission of Bantam Books, a division of Random House, Inc.

    Introduction

    THIS IS an anthology of the thoughts on leadership of combat commanders—twenty in all—over the past 250 years. Their written (or spoken) words are quoted from primary sources—translated where necessary. They are Western leaders, save Vo Nguyen Giap (a North Vietnamese general) and perhaps Moshe Dayan (an Israeli commander but European in culture and training). The views of warriors may help balance the scale of military thought, which, since the fall of Napoleon, has been tipped heavily toward theory by a surfeit of books, beginning with Carl von Clausewitz’s Vom Kriege (1832)¹ and Antoine de Jomini’s Pr´écis de l’art de la guerre (1838).²

    This collection should allow historians in general to try to discern (or divine) the commanders’ ontological, epistemological, and teleological views (their hermeneutics are traditional), and surely be useful to military historians and their readers. It should also be of interest to people in all walks of life who make executive decisions, civil or military; they can compare their management and leadership ideas with those of military masters.

    The leaders I have chosen all belong to what has been termed the muddy boots school of leadership.³ This, of course, reflects my personal predilection. Among my choices, personalities vary from charismatic to enigmatic to stern to outwardly hateful (e.g., Joseph Stilwell, called Vinegar Joe). But these men all led from the front. This was true of Frederick the Great, Napoleon, and the others, whether (at the time their leadership is examined) they were at the head of armies (Sherman, Rommel, Patton, Ridgway); brigades or corps (Stonewall Jackson), battalions (Harold Moore, Nick Vaux), or guerrilla bands (Lawrence of Arabia, John Mosby), or had experience at both lower and higher command (DeGaulle, Manstein, Slim, Montgomery, Moshe Dayan, Giap, and Schwarz-kopf). They were all also improvisors, believers in single command, and mildly or flagrantly eccentric.

    Naturally, not all worthy commanders are quoted herein. Another writer might have chosen differently, and surely many of the best left no records because they were killed or lacked the talent, inclination, or personality to write or dictate their ideas.⁴ The Elder Helmuth von Moltke does not figure in this collection because his chief work was perfecting the Prussian general staff. Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee of the American Civil War are passed over because neither addressed leadership issues in a forthright way; Sherman did and is included; he also represents what has been called the American way of war.⁵Soviet Marshal Georgii Konstantinovich Zhukov, of World War II, is also omitted, because he attributes his successes to Josef Stalin and the Communist Party and his own leadership techniques are obscure. Vo Nguyen Giap shows the same tendencies as Zhukov, but is quoted, since he was both a Communist Party leader and North Vietnam’s generalissimo—and also because of continuing American and Western interest in the Vietnam War. Other selections or exclusions were made on similar bases, or represent personal choices, or, in part, the urge to give voice to reviled commanders (e.g., Wavell and Stilwell), who did well, considering their circumstances, missions, and limited resources.

    Some of our commanders (e.g., Stonewall Jackson, Erwin Rommel) fought in wars that were lost because their countries lacked effective political leadership, or economic resources, or industry, or manpower, or allies, or all of these. Others led their troops well, but lost because their societies were defeatist or defensive-minded (e.g., DeGaulle in France in 1940),⁶ or divided over support of a war (e.g., Schwarzkopf—among hundreds of other dedicated officers and NCOs—as a battalion commander in Vietnam).

    All were effective in their time, in their war, with the troops they led. I have put the commanders in chronological order because it seemed better to attach commanders to particular wars, of which readers would have some knowledge, rather than put them in categories. For example, a guerrilla category would include Mosby and Lawrence; there were similarities in their operations, but their wars and the societies and cultures that produced the commanders and their troops were radically different. Mosby and his rangers and rebel sympathizers are presented in the context of the American Civil War, and Lawrence and his Bedouins that of the First World War in the Middle East. In all cases, the sociocultural milieu of troops—especially in mass warfare—has had a marked effect on national or coalition power.

    Of course there have been dramatic changes in war over more than two centuries, which must be taken into account. As governments and societies changed, so did war. Populations increased worldwide—44 to 100% in European nations during the eighteenth century—and the trend continued, agriculture became more technical, enabling ever fewer farmers to feed nations; labor was available for industry, and opportunity bred entrepreneurs. Ever larger armies could be fed and equipped. The same developments spawned democratic revolutions.⁷ With the spread of democracy, governments, whether authoritarian or representative, felt justified to draft citizens to fight and to demand universal support of war efforts. As scientific and technical knowledge and industrial skill and capacity increased, armed forces took advantage of new tools of war. Wars have accelerated discovery and innovation when nations have put their resources behind research. For example, the development of nuclear power, space exploration, and satellite communication since 1945 has been based on advances in nuclear science, electronics, and rocketry during World War II.⁸

    The Changing Nature of War

    The major changes in warfare since 1740 have derived from or been necessitated by the ever burgeoning size of armed forces through World War II (1939– 45), followed by the reduction since 1945 of forces actually deployed; improvements in weaponry, communications and transportation; and the escalating need for armies to cooperate closely with navies and air forces. The trend through 1945 was toward total war; since 1945,toward limited war. We shall treat these changes chronologically.

    Frederick the Great never commanded over 90,000 men in the field, and won his greatest victories with forces of 25–35,000. Napoleon’s battlefield forces seldom numbered more than 70,000—though his total forces were much larger. (For example, the Grande Armé e that invaded Russia [1812] was 611,000 strong, but Napoleon fought the greatest battle, Borodino, with 130,000 men.) Mass armies were raised first in revolutionary France by the levée en masse (1793), linked to the dictum that male citizens had a duty to fight for their country. (In 1794,French forces peaked at 800,000 [1,000,000 on paper], then declined.)⁹ Conscription was continued by Napoleon, who liked to identify with the Revolution: "The Imperial Guard always marched to the Marseillaise."¹⁰

    Neither the generals of the Revolution nor Napoleon could maneuver great masses of troops, however, given the primitive state of communications; nor could their economies support them. Neither could the generals of France’s enemies who matched her field armies in size largely by traditional means.¹¹

    Weapons of this period were short-range: infantry muskets had a maximum range of 200–300 yards, ¹² field artillery, 1,000 yards.¹³ Horses pulled the cannon and supply wagons, and were mounts for officers, cavalry, and men of the horse artillery.¹⁴ Commanders could see the whole battlefield—from one high hill or with a little galloping about. Communication was by messenger or visual or sound signal.¹⁵

    In the American Civil War (1861–65), the Union fielded 2,300,000 men and the Confederacy 1,000,000—both using the draft.¹⁶ The Spencer and Sharps carbines (.56) were used by the Union cavalry. A few Union infantry units had the Sharps rifle (.52), and some the Springfield rifled musket (.58), but the infantry on both sides fought mostly with smooth-bore muskets. The officers and cavalry had Colt and Remington six-shot pistols (.44 revolvers). Confederate officers’ favorite was the nonissue .40 Lemat revolver, nine shot, with a shotgun barrel in the center. The Union army had a crude machine gun, the Gatling gun, with six rotating barrels. Rifled artillery was available, some breech-loading, as well as smooth-bore Napoleons;¹⁷ but all fire was still direct, at visible targets, and remained so until end of the century, so that often guns were judged by power, not range. Infantry used hand grenades, mines, and booby traps. Both sides transported troops by rail and communicated via electric telegraph. Generals (with exceptions) learned to stay out of artillery range.

    In the nineteenth century, most western nations adopted conscription (the British not until 1916). During this time the Prussians devised a means to command mass armies—the Grosse Generalstab (Great General Staff), perfected by General (later Field Marshal) Helmuth von Moltke while chief of staff (1857– 88). He used it to plan and win seemingly effortless victories over Austria in 1866 and France in 1870–71.¹⁸ Moltke’s triumphs convinced other powers to adopt the staff system, modified according to national inclinations.¹⁹

    In World War I (1914–18) conscription produced the largest armies the world had yet seen. The British Empire mustered 8.9 million troops; France 8.4 million; the United States 4.4 million; Russia 12 million; and Germany 11 million. For the first time in large numbers, women had an official role, chiefly as nurses.

    World War I saw the advent of the tank—clumsy and undependable, but able to roll over barbed wire and trenches. (On 20 November 1917,at Cambrai, 324 tanks led a British attack; by day’s end over 300 were out of action—most of them broken down.) Horse cavalry was deployed, but was effective only in the Middle East and occasionally on the Russian front. The infantry had long-range magazine-fed rifles and belt-fed machine guns.²⁰ Field artillery and high-trajectory howitzers fired millions of high-explosive rounds on and behind enemy lines before attacks.²¹ Both sides came to use poison gas. Airplanes and dirigibles were employed for observation, then as fighters and bombers. The aircraft were fragile but inspired hope in proponents of airpower. Glory went to fighter pilots,²² but aircraft also supported ground action.²³

    Communication was by messenger (horse or motorcycle), telegraph, semaphore, and primitive radio. Horse- or oxen-drawn wagons, motorized trucks, and railroads carried supplies and troops.

    Generals on both sides—down to division level—made few or no trips to the front lines, and commanded through staffs. Leadership was the most impersonal in history. Casualties were enormous.²⁴

    In World War II (1939–45) more men (and women) were mobilized than in the Great War. The United States mustered 14.9 million men and women; the British Empire raised 6.2 million; the USSR 25 million; Germany 12.5 million; Japan 7.5 million. Battle casualties were light for the western allies, but more civilians were killed than during World War I.²⁵ Many women entered the armed forces to fill noncombat positions. The U.S. Army Air Force had hundreds of women pilots, some of whom had such hazardous duty as flying aircraft from the United States to the war zones. The USSR had women in combat roles; their fighter pilots made an astonishing record.²⁶

    Tanks dominated the battlefield where terrain and weather allowed.²⁷ The German Tiger tank (88mm gun) was arguably the best, but came late and in small numbers. Infantry had improved magazine-fed rifles, carbines, grenades, mortars, the United States a 2.36 inch bazooka (shoulder-fired anti-tank rocket), and flamethrowers. German infantry had effective anti-tank guns. Heavy artillery could hit targets far behind enemy lines, light artillery in the opponent’s rear.²⁸ The Germans had heavy nebelwerfer (rocket artillery).²⁹ Latein the war, U.S. and British four-engine bombers—1,000 or more, day and night—struck deep into Europe; larger U.S. B-29 bombers hit Japan. Allied fighters escorted bombers, tangled with German and Japanese aircraft, and supported ground troops. For the invasion of Normandy, the Allies put up over 5,000 bombers and 3,500 fighters. The Germans, with 1,424 aircraft of all types, were overwhelmed, although since late 1944 they had sent up 500 mph jet fighters, superior to anything flying. Their V-1 and V-2 rockets with heavy explosive warheads terrorized London in 1944. Naval aircraft carriers played a key role in the war against Japan, and helped elsewhere.

    British and American cryptanalysts broke the German and Japanese military codes, which gave Allied commanders—ground, air, and naval—advance knowledge of enemy moves.³⁰ British technicians had invented radar to detect incoming aircraft and sonar to detect submarines before the war. The United States developed the atomic bomb; two, dropped on Japan in 1945,ended the war in Asia.³¹

    The general and lower staffs were still standard, and had become even larger, but had less authority in operations, and more in logistical and personnel matters. The high commanders had been young officers in the Great War, and knew the hazards of the system. With vastly improved vehicles, tanks, aircraft, and weapons, strategists introduced maneuver back into the war. Generals had to handle both ground and air forces, make use of airborne troops, and cooperate with the navies. Command of the air and often the sea became mandatory for victory, although the war was still won by infantry, greatly aided by tanks, artillery, and fighter planes. There were superb commanders at army level who led personally, did their own reconnaissance, and trusted their intuition. (See chapters VII [Rommel] and VIII [Patton].)

    Hardly had World War II ended when the Cold War (1949–89) began. It evolved into a standoff between the two major nuclear powers, the United States and the Soviet Union. Neither power was willing to risk war involving atomic weapons—even small tactical ones. Giant steps were made in technology; both nations developed rockets and guided missiles and put satellites into orbit—for general use and intelligence—and sent men into space. Both developed nuclear-powered naval vessels, including submarines capable of launching intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs).

    The real wars were either conventional and small-scale (e.g., the Arab-Israeli conflicts; the Falklands War) or ultimately fought for limited objectives (the Korean and Vietnam wars, both terminated by negotiation and without victory). Forces were reduced accordingly.

    The Korean War (1950–53) pitted the forces of the Republic of (South) Korea, aided by United Nations (mainly U.S.) forces, against those of the People’s Republic of (North) Korea, reinforced by Chinese units. The maximum strength of UN forces was about 500,000—two-thirds ground forces, eventually well equipped and supported by USAF and USN fighters and bombers and occasionally naval fire.

    American infantry went in with World War II weapons, which sufficed, withsome additions.³² Helicopters were used for medical evacuation. New USAF jet aircraft took control of the skies, but were too fast to give the infantry accurate support; slower World War II fighters did the job. The U.S. Navy controlled the seas from the start. Transport included aircraft, railroad, trucks, and jeeps. It was a war of fronts until 1952,when lines of trenches and emplacements were built on both sides of a frequently violated DMZ (demilitarized zone) at the 38th parallel, during peace talks. African-Americans, assigned to segregated units in previous wars, were integrated into formations of the U.S. Army, Navy, and Air Force for the first time.

    After a very rocky start, leadership was personal, selfless, and inventive. Allies fielded elite units, notably British Commonwealth, French, and Turkish forces.

    The war ended with the restoration of the (South) Korean Republic; an armistice was signed in July 1953,but no peace treaty. American and ROK troops remain in the DMZ today (2002).

    The Vietnam War (1964–73) began after a decade of U.S. assistance to the anti-Communist (South) Vietnamese Republic and army (ARVN). U.S. forces were drawn into the ARVN antiguerrilla campaign, and in 1965 into war with the Peoples’ Republic of (North) Vietnam.

    At peak U.S. forces in this war numbered about 500,000. In nine years of fighting, some 3,000,000,many draftees, served tours of one year or less in Vietnam, mostly in ground forces.³³ Women and African-Americans were prominently represented. Conscription was abolished in the United States after this war.

    American forces were well equipped throughout. Helicopters came into their own as gunships and cargo and troop carriers.³⁴ The infantry had improved rifles and machine guns, grenades, and the monster M-79 grenade launcher. They were backed by artillery, Army gunships, and USAF and USN planes.³⁵ The latter took control of the air, and at times heavy bombers struck at targets in North Vietnam and Cambodia. Tanks were of little use in the jungle. It was an infantry war; men moved in by air and on foot, and by truck in rear areas. Actions ranged from patrols to company and battalion sweeps to brief larger engagements. There were no fronts.

    Generals normally visited by helicopter, or flew overhead and talked to lower commanders by radio. The more effective brigade and division commanders landed most often in battle zones. Leadership was good throughout at the fighting level, but became increasingly difficult as American society turned against the war. (See chapters XVII [Moore] and XIX [Schwarzkopf].) US forces never lost a major battle.

    Washington opted to end the war by negotiation, and technically succeeded. All U.S. forces withdrew (late 1972), leaving the Army of the Republic of (South) Vietnam armed to defend the country. But the ARVN was demolished by the Peoples’ Army of (North) Vietnam (PAVN), which attacked and unified Vietnam in 1975.

    In the Persian Gulf War (1991), U.S. and allied forces totalled 500,000 men and women—roughly 250,000 army, 80,000 air force, and 170,000 navy and marines, including U.S. reserve and National Guard units. Iraq had almost 600,000 men, virtually all ground troops. The U.S. infantry had improved versions of Vietnam-era weapons, plus new tank-killing guided missiles, ³⁶ and moved in armored personnel carriers or infantry fighting vehicles (APCs or IFVs).³⁷ U.S. tanks mounted 105 and 120mm guns (plus machine guns). Artillery had heavy guns, ³⁸ plus 12-barrel multiple rocket launchers, with computer fire control, launching projectiles of up to 334 pounds. Attack helicopters could launch up to 70 rockets. Ground forces were backed by USAF, USN, and allied fighters with advanced computer targeted and guided projectiles.³⁹

    Iraq was defeated in 100 hours—24–27 February 1991—by the forces of the United States and her allies, after a lengthy air campaign. Allied armament overwhelmed the enemy. Leadership was professional, by the book, heavily dependent on staffs, and undramatic but effective. American officers took pains to see that the United States did not get into another Vietnam situation.⁴⁰

    In the Gulf War the Allied force, although considered small, numbered more than the maximum Napoleon had on any battlefield (190,000,at Wagram, 1809).⁴¹ Practically speaking, there was no limit to the range of weapons—taken all together. Every part of the enemy’s homeland could be hit by artillery or aircraft rockets. The generals in command could view any given part of the battle via television; USAF commander General Charles Horner had such a good view and good radio connections with his aircraft that he could have micromanaged the air war, but declined to do so.⁴² A U.S. infantry battalion in the Gulf had more than the firepower of Napoleon’s entire Grande Armée of 1812. Napoleon had foot soldiers, horse-drawn artillery, and cavalry on horses that had to be rested frequently to be effective. In the Gulf, infantry went forward in tracked vehicles, the First Cavalry Division in helicopters. Tanks and self-propelled artillery kept pace. Aircraft, on instant call by radio, prepared the way and supported the ground forces. General Norman Schwarzkopf’s task was far from simple, all the same. He had to know the capabilities and limitations of all his troops and their weapons, including Allied contingents. He had to execute on a front of over 600 miles what would have been a tactical envelopment for Napoleon on a front of perhaps five miles—holding on his right while delivering a massive left hook that penetrated the enemy rear.

    About This Book

    This book reveals much about the mind of the warrior, a player in every nation’s life—his views on life, death, loyalty, duty, honor, patriotism, religion, sending men into battle; the degrees of cruelty and kindness to troops necessary for discipline while building trust, loyalty, and camaraderie; the proper regard due troops’ families, and related matters. The commanders discuss problems of supply, the effectiveness of new weapons as they appear, when numbers count, the importance of airpower and sea power, and other matters.

    The commanders quoted in extenso led troops who risked their lives in battle. Such leaders are essential to victory—no matter how inspired the plans spun out at higher levels. Wars decide the fate of nations and the power balance in the world. That is a reality, however unpleasant. War has always been part of human history, and promises to continue to be; thus it should be fruitful to examine what successful military leaders have said, over the past 250 years, about how to lead men to victory.

    The first chapter of this anthology gives, briskly, via aphorisms, the views of both Frederick the Great and Napoleon, to whom most of the our commanders express a debt.⁴³ Subsequent chapters are devoted to each of the other eighteen commanders. Each includes a short biographical sketch followed by passages quoted from their works (for which, in the cases of Jackson, Rommel, and Patton, their wives are greatly responsible) and for some, the writings of reliable associates.

    Frederick, Napoleon, Montgomery, and some others left commentary or instructions intended to educate future leaders. Their thoughts have been organized under various headings. Some, like George Patton and Erich von Man-stein, left a few disquisitions which can be so organized, but other parts of their oeuvres do not fit into neat categories, and have been left as written (except for editorial notations in italics). Others left only narrative accounts of their actions, interspersed with jottings in diaries or letters; Lawrence of Arabia, Erwin Rommel (for the most part), Moshe Dayan, Nick Vaux, and Norman Schwarzkopf are in this category. In such cases, a few headings have been added, but the narrative has been left undisturbed except when it was felt necessary to shorten certain sections; then summaries of intervening events have been supplied.

    There are brief conclusions at the end of each chapter, but none make comparisons among commanders. The general conclusions at the end of the book discuss points of leadership on which all or most of them seem to agree, despite changes in the nature of war.

    It is hoped that this book will find a readership. Perhaps it will also have a modest effect on how the art of War is taught, which would please a current resident of Valhalla, General George S. Patton, Jr., who wrote after World War II:

    The horrid thought obtrudes itself that, in spite of my efforts . . . the tactics of the next war will be written by someone who never fought and who acquired his knowledge by a . . . study of the regulations of this and the last World War, none of which were ever put into practice in battle.⁴⁴

    Bitter Root, Montana

    1 April 2001

    I

    The Modern Originals

    FREDERICK THE GREAT (1713–1786) AND NAPOLEON (1769–1821)

    This chapter differs from those that follow in that it largely comprises aphorisms. The intent was to make it short, but still give the major ideas of Frederick and Napoleon, to whom the commanders in the chapters that follow owe a debt.

    Backgrounds

    Among purveyors of wisdom on the art of war, Frederick the Great and Napoleon have surely had the most influence over the past 200 years. For whatever reasons, their pronouncements are strikingly similar on many subjects. Thus it seems reasonable to devote a single chapter to them and their thoughts.

    The future Frederick II of Prussia had a miserable boyhood because his soldier-father, Frederick-William I (1688–1740), was enraged by his intellectual interests and flute-playing. Napoleon, future emperor of the French, grew up in Italian-speaking Corsica in a normal, happy home—if subject to his mother’s stern discipline and religiosity. Frederick was born to the purple, and Napoleon not, but both were trained to be officers—Frederick almost from birth, Napoleon from age 9 in royal French military schools.

    Frederick acceded to the throne in 1740,and almost immediately began using his army to enlarge his kingdom. He left the field in the middle of his first battle, Mollwitz (1741), because one of his father’s old generals, in command, predicted defeat; the battle was later won nevertheless. Angry with himself, he thereafter led in person with almost insane bravery. Stories tell of spent musket balls falling from his coat when he stopped at soldiers’ campfires. He fought two wars (1741–45) with Austria, and the Seven Years War (1757–63) (aided only by Great Britain, largely with money) against Austria, her German Empire, France, and Russia. His forte was tactical misdirection of the enemy, preceded by strategic surprise, by which he defeated armies much larger than his own.

    Napoleon was commissioned at 16,and at 24 was a general—thanks to his talent and the chaotic conditions of the French Revolutionary era. In 1796,at 26,he was given command of an army, and for 20 years he was the most feared general in Europe, fighting first for the French Republic, then his own Consulate and Empire. His forte was improvision, by which (until all his enemies finally allied against him) he steadily won over armies larger than his own.

    Despite the differences in the early lives of Napoleon and Frederick, there were similarities in their habits and personalities. For example, they were both avid readers. At the age of puberty, Napoleon said at St. Helena, . . . reading became a passion pushed to the edge of rage. He had a specially bound library of almost 1,000 books that he carried on campaign.¹ Frederick, during one period of his life, lived on books and coffee, day and night, until he collapsed. Both were hypersensitive, nearly paranoid—which was useful on campaign, where both rode herd on their subordinates relentlessly, and let their minds run on how to counter every possible move the enemy might make.² Both were men whose lives were their work. Both seemed perpetually awake in the field; and in their palaces, they kept schedules night and day, sleeping for a few hours around midnight, rising to work, returning to bed before dawn, rising before the normal business day began.

    Both believed in the heavy use of artillery. Frederick, whenever possible, had seven guns per 1,000 men.³ Napoleon, whose guns were more maneuverable and (on average) of heavier caliber, had only two to three per 1,000 men.⁴ But their purposes were the same—to spare the infantry—to open avenues for attack. Both were steadfast (or stubborn) to the extreme; neither would ever quit.

    Both fought where possible to annihilate enemy armies, though both wanted a profit from ultimate victory—territorial or otherwise. Ritter says Frederick fought battles of annihilation but wanted to defeat the Habsburgs only to acquire Silesia.⁵ Frederick wrote: Our wars should be short and quickly fought. . . . A long war destroys . . . our [army’s] discipline; depopulates the country, and exhausts our resources.⁶ Napoleon tried to shorten his wars (and end his campaigns) with a crushing victory, as at Austerlitz, which campaign was fought in three months and netted him two new Napoleonic kingdoms, Naples and Holland.

    Like Frederick, Napoleon convinced his troops that he was fearless, even unkillable, and that success made him worth 40,000 men on the battlefield. Delbrück writes of Frederick: Why did [opposing commanders] not take advantage of the favorable opportunities that he offered them frequently enough? They did not dare. They believed him capable of everything.⁷ Napoleon preferred that the troops see him as the man of destiny—simultaneously the personification of French grandeur and glory and the Little Corporal, unafraid (as at Lodi, 1796) to get dirty while aiming the cannon himself. His appearances left unforgettable images that were the stuff of tales of veterans and their descendants for generations.

    Like Frederick, Napoleon was a patron and friend to his troops, but demanding, severe, and downright nasty with the officers. He got generals and marshals to obey in knee-jerk fashion with violent abuse for any mistakes (including some that were really his), balanced by generous gifts of money, lands, titles, and medals. Drill sergeants and horse trainers also use this method.

    Did Napoleon emulate Frederick, or were the two just similar in thought and habit? No one will ever know. That Napoleon admired the Prussian king is certain. In 1788,as a lieutenant, he made notes on books on Frederick and Prussia.⁸ They list events, battles, dates, names, and (a lifetime fascination) figures—poor evidence that he learned any of Frederick’s secrets. All the same, he always held that Frederick was the greatest modern general; he visited the king’s tomb in Potsdam after defeating the Prussian army (1806). During his final exile on St. Helena (1815–21), he analyzed Frederick’s campaigns and dismissed his critics:

    They reproach the great captain [for a variety of mistakes] . . . But his faults are eclipsed by great actions, beautiful maneuvers, fearless decisions which allowed him to walk away victorious from struggles where the odds were against him. He was greatest in the most critical moments, which is the highest tribute one can make to his character.

    Napoleon agreed with Frederick on many basic tenets, the major exception being the king’s tactical oblique order, which Napoleon thought was a drillfield maneuver that Frederick never used in battle; he found it amusing that foreign observers of his maneuvers recommended their armies adopt it.¹⁰

    Both were intellectuals as well as soldiers; Napoleon was elected to the French Institut while a general of the Republic, wrote essays and novellas in his youth, dictated voluminous memoirs in exile on St. Helena, and left behind hundreds of edicts and orders amid thousands of letters. Frederick left 30 volumes of Oeuvres, mostly in French, including his Principes généraux de la guerre and instructions to his generals, and much more.¹¹

    Paired below are the opinions of Frederick and Napoleon on various subjects.Translations are largely from Frederick’s Principes and Napoleon’s Correspondance, ¹² with a few additions from the compilations of Picard, Palluel, and Dansette.¹³

    Great Commanders Are Born

    F R E D E R I C K :

    What is called the coup d’oeil [sweep of the eye] . . . consists of two things, of which one is the talent to instantly judge the number of [the enemy]. That can be acquired by practice. . . . The other talent, which is altogether superior, is [the ability] to instantly judge all the advantages that can be drawn from the terrain; one can acquire and perfect that talent provided one was born with a genius for war.¹⁴

    N A P O L E O N :

    The art of war . . . can be learned neither from books nor from practice [experience]: it is a touch for command that constitutes a genius for war.¹⁵

    My presence was indispensable anywhere I wanted to win a victory. It was a flaw in my armor: None of my generals had the [personal] force for a large independent command.¹⁶

    Attitude While on Campaign

    F R E D E R I C K :

    One should constantly analyze the situation in which one finds oneself: What plan would I form if I were the enemy? After imagining several, one should think about what means to use to counter the plans, and immediately correct anything that is defective in one’s position.¹⁷

    N A P O L E O N :

    A great captain ought to say to himself several times a day: If the enemy army should appear on my front, or my right or on my left, what will I do? If he is embarrassed by the question, he is badly posted, he is not in proper order, he must remedy that.¹⁸

    Unity of Command

    F R E D E R I C K :

    [A commander] should act on his own [doit agir par lui-même]¹⁹

    The secret of war is never found in councils of war.²⁰

    The general [should] talk of war from time to time with the most enlightened generals of his army . . . and if, in free conversation, they offer good advice, he should profit by it without remarking who has found a good thing; but once it is executed with success, he should say, in the presence of a big group of officers: It is to so-and-so that I owe the success in this affair. You flatter the egos [amour-propre] of others . . . you win friends.²¹

    N A P O L E O N :

    In military operations, I consulted no one but myself.²²

    One bad general . . . is worth more than two good ones.²³

    Unity of command is the first necessity of war. It is vital . . . to concentrate the greatest possible forces on the field of battle, to profit by all opportunities, for fortune is a woman; if you lose her today, don’t expect to get her back tomorrow.²⁴

    Keeping Forces Together

    F R E D E R I C K :

    It is an ancient rule of war . . . if you separate your forces, you will be beaten in detail; if you want to give battle, assemble as many troops as you can; no better way is known to put them to better use.²⁵

    N A P O L E O N :

    The art of war does not consist of dividing the troops.²⁶

    General rule: When you want to fight a battle, assemble all your forces, do not neglect any; one battalion can sometimes decide the day.²⁷

    Generals

    F R E D E R I C K :

    A general considered audacious in another country is only ordinary in [Prus-sia]; [our general] is able to dare and undertake anything it is possible for men to execute [do].²⁸

    How many contradictory virtues enter into the makeup of a general! I suppose, he should be a gentleman and good citizen, qualities without which skills [in] the art of war are more pernicious than useful. One also asks that he should be devious [and] straightforward, gentle and severe, defiant without ceasing and always tranquil, sensitive about humanity and sometimes free with the blood of soldiers, intellectual, personally active, discreet, profound, educated in everything, not forgetting one thing to do another, and not neglecting the little details that are so critical to the support of great things.²⁹

    N A P O L E O N :

    Military genius is a gift from God, but the most essential quality of a general-in-chief is the strength of character and resolution to win at all costs.³⁰

    In war, men are nothing; it is one man [the commander] who is everything.³¹

    The tactics, . . . the science of the engineer and artilleryman can be learned from books . . . like geometry; but knowledge of the higher elements of war can be acquired only through the study of the history of the wars . . . of the great commanders and through experience. There are no precise, determined rules; everything depends on the character that nature has given the general: . . . the nature of the troops, the arms available, the season, and a thousand other circumstances that may never have arisen before.³²

    [The Romans] had fixed attack and defensive formations [ordres de bataille constant]; but, since the invention of firearms, the manner of occupying a position . . . or giving battle depend on many different factors—and vary with circumstances . . . the coup d’oeil militaire—the decision according to the experience or genius of the general-in chief—that is the main thing.³³

    [Comment on Jomini’s works:] Generals are beaten who . . . follow the principles which they have been taught [principes qu’on leur a inculqué s]. There are too many diverse elements in war.³⁴

    Offense and Defense

    F R E D E R I C K :

    If I disapprove [and I do] of a totally defensive campaign, it is not because I think you can always fight a completely offensive war; but I ask that a general not feel badly about going on defense, and that he instead turn it into a ruse, excite the ego of his enemies, and induce them to make mistakes from which he can profit.³⁵

    N A P O L E O N :

    The art of war consists of a well reasoned, extremely circumspect defense, and an audacious and rapid offense.³⁶

    A defensive war does not exclude the attack, just as the offensive does not exclude the defense.³⁷

    The Art of War

    F R E D E R I C K :

    In war, one dons alternately the skin of the lion and the skin of the fox.³⁸

    Pretend feebleness or timidity. Tempt the enemy with an ostensibly stupid maneuver. Excite his vanity [amour propre].³⁹

    The discipline of our troops is the foundation of the glory and preservation of [our] country.⁴⁰

    [Sometimes] the full details of the situation ought to oblige the general to yield [decide according] to his means and to prefer a practicable project to a brilliant one.⁴¹

    N A P O L E O N :

    Always remember three things: unity of forces, positive action, and firm resolution to perish [if need be] with glory. These are the grand principles of the military art that always gave me good fortune in all my operations. Death is nothing; to live defeated and without glory is to die every day.⁴²

    War can only be fought with force, decision, and . . . determination; there can be no uncertainty or hesitation.⁴³

    The art of war is a simple art and all in execution . . . it is all common sense; nothing about it is theoretical.⁴⁴

    A good general, good cadres, a good organization, good instruction, good discipline make good troops, independent of the cause for which they fight; however, it is true that fanaticism, love of country, national glory, can inspire young troops to advantage.⁴⁵

    The musket is the best war machine ever invented by man.⁴⁶

    In war, morale and opinion are the better part of reality. The art of the great captains has always been to publish and make appear to the enemy that their troops are more numerous, and to their own army that the enemy is quite inferior [in strength].⁴⁷

    In war, three quarters [is] morale; the balance of real forces make up the other quarter.⁴⁸

    Planning and Improvision

    F R E D E R I C K :

    In general, campaign projects have to be adjusted to conditions [time, weather], the number of the enemy. . . . The more one foresees obstacles to his plans, the less one will find of them later in the execution. In a word, everything must be foreseen; find the problems and resolve them.⁴⁹

    The principal work of a general is in his office, devising projects, combining ideas . . . to foresee the designs of the enemy, anticipate them, and keep the enemy disturbed. But that is not enough; he must also be active, and see that what he orders is executed, that he sees everything himself. He must observe [the enemy] camps [and] their guards, and walk the battle line frequently to get familiar with it; then if he is attacked by an improvisor, nothing will be new to him.⁵⁰

    N A P O L E O N :

    Campaign plans are to be modified á l’infini, according to the circumstances, the talent of the general, the nature of his troops, and the topography.

    ¹

    I have the habit of thinking about what I ought to do four or five months in advance.⁵²

    [The first quality of a great general] is the courage of the improviste. . . . War is composed altogether of accidents. . . . A [great] commander never loses sight of what he can do to profit by these accidents. . . . The outcome of a battle . . .is the result of one instant, one thought . . .

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